Fragmenta.
Cómo FuncionaPreciosHoyBlogENDescargar para iOS
EN
Hoy›Cita
Cita·Grecia Antigua·Classical Athens

Aristophanes and Women's Power

"Let women manage the city!" — Aristophanes, Ecclesiazusae, has women stage a radical coup in comedy, but the laughter bites.

Aristophanes and Women's Power

Jacques Louis David — "The Death of Socrates" (1787), public domain

Comedy becomes proposal.

In 392 BC, Aristophanes' play Ecclesiazusae put the line 'Let women manage the city!' in the mouths of Athenian wives. Through disguise and cunning, they seize the Assembly. Athens laughs, but the joke stings: it imagines a world upside-down—yet oddly functional.

Laughing at, or with, women?

Male audiences were meant to scoff at female rule, but Aristophanes makes his heroines absurdly competent. The play punctures Athenian fears about democracy's future and women's voices. Satire, in his hands, is a tool for asking who really should hold power.

In Ecclesiazusae, Aristophanes let his female characters take over the Athenian assembly—satirizing, but also spotlighting anxieties about changing gender and political roles.

Sigue leyendo en la app

Fragmentos diarios de historia antigua, diseñados para tu rutina matutina.

Descargar para iOS
5.0 en la App Store
Fragmenta.

Hecho con cuidado para la historia que lo merece.

App Store

Producto

Cómo FuncionaFragmentos DiariosCaracterísticasHoy en la HistoriaBlogDescargar

Legal

Política de PrivacidadTérminos de ServicioEULASoportePrensa

Conecta

TikTok
© 2026 Fragmenta. Todos los derechos reservados.